Ricers vs R1 ags

   / Ricers vs R1 ags #1  

Neat 1500

Platinum Member
Joined
Aug 30, 2009
Messages
863
Location
Queensland,Australia
Tractor
Only a YM14 MkII
i am looking for some one that has tried both of these tyres as i am curious to know how well they grip vs how much damage they do, for instance my rice tyres grip well forward but destroy the ground under them. but in saying that they dont grip well in reverse due to the way the lugs are cut. i have ags (R1s) on the front but it is only 2WD (helps lots steering in the mud) but the ricers on the rear and am looking at replacing them with R1s. if there is minimal or no difference i wont bother. i could also cut my rice lugs down to look like R1s but how well does that work?
 
   / Ricers vs R1 ags #2  
i am looking for some one that has tried both of these tyres as i am curious to know how well they grip vs how much damage they do, for instance my rice tyres grip well forward but destroy the ground under them. but in saying that they dont grip well in reverse due to the way the lugs are cut. i have ags (R1s) on the front but it is only 2WD (helps lots steering in the mud) but the ricers on the rear and am looking at replacing them with R1s. if there is minimal or no difference i wont bother. i could also cut my rice lugs down to look like R1s but how well does that work?

If your on a lawn i would try them, they cant be as bad but im sure there close. I have no exp. though, and personally would leave them.
 
   / Ricers vs R1 ags #3  
What sort of surface are you on the most? Dirt, sand, gravel, turf, and how wet? The rice tires, as I understand, are optimized for mud.
 
   / Ricers vs R1 ags
  • Thread Starter
#4  
What sort of surface are you on the most? Dirt, sand, gravel, turf, and how wet? The rice tires, as I understand, are optimized for mud.

dirt, and a hack it up they do.....:(
 
   / Ricers vs R1 ags #5  
I ran across this comparison, and while it's not directly applicable to your question, there is a comment made near the end suggesting that deeper lugs do not help traction in normal soil conditions, and may in fact hurt traction some. Keeping in mind of course, that the data is being presented by someone trying to sell you something.

To get a definitive answer, seems like you need another 1500 :thumbsup: with ag tires on it, and a third tractor :thumbsup: with some ground-engaging implement. :cool:
 
   / Ricers vs R1 ags #6  
I have found that the turf tires I got from Hoye give me far better traction in loose sand, dirt, grass, gravel and any hard surface than I had with the rice tires. I tore up a lot of dirt and grass with the rice tires, but the turf tires have been much kinder to the surface.
 
   / Ricers vs R1 ags #7  
I have R3 turf tires -- these are about the same width as my rice tires but with a turf-friendly tread. I have found that when using the R3s on grass going up a modest hill when it's slippery, I need to engage the locking differential occasionally, i.e., the traction isn't great on wet grass.
 
   / Ricers vs R1 ags #8  
I have R3 turf tires -- these are about the same width as my rice tires but with a turf-friendly tread. I have found that when using the R3s on grass going up a modest hill when it's slippery, I need to engage the locking differential occasionally, i.e., the traction isn't great on wet grass.

This seems different that the rice tires i got. Granted i really dont do much travel on wet yard grass, but the few times i have and any slope in my fields that i have i dont seem to slip, but i really dont have much slope that i would think would cause any tire to slip other than a bald tire.
 
   / Ricers vs R1 ags #9  
Short of cutting into the surface and tearing it up, traction is based on contact surface area. Turf tires give you more contact surface area. If the goal is to get the most traction without damage to the surface, turf tires win. You may get more traction in some conditions with ag tires, but the price for the traction is the digging in on the surface.
 
   / Ricers vs R1 ags #10  
This seems different that the rice tires i got. Granted i really dont do much travel on wet yard grass, but the few times i have and any slope in my fields that i have i dont seem to slip, but i really dont have much slope that i would think would cause any tire to slip other than a bald tire.

Clemsonfor -- Not sure if you understood my post. I was talking about slipping when using the R3s not the rice tires. I haven't used the rice tires much yet...
 

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